A dynamic assembly of diverse transcription factors integrates activation and cell-type information for interleukin 2 gene regulation.

EV Rothenberg, SB Ward - Proceedings of the National …, 1996 - National Acad Sciences
EV Rothenberg, SB Ward
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 1996National Acad Sciences
The interleukin 2 (IL-2) gene is subject to two types of regulation: its expression is T-
lymphocyte-specific and it is acutely dependent on specific activation signals. The IL-2
transcriptional apparatus integrates multiple types of biochemical information in determining
whether or not the gene will be expressed, using multiple diverse transcription factors that
are each optimally activated or inhibited by different signaling pathways. When activation of
one or two of these factors is blocked IL-2 expression is completely inhibited. The inability of …
The interleukin 2 (IL-2) gene is subject to two types of regulation: its expression is T-lymphocyte-specific and it is acutely dependent on specific activation signals. The IL-2 transcriptional apparatus integrates multiple types of biochemical information in determining whether or not the gene will be expressed, using multiple diverse transcription factors that are each optimally activated or inhibited by different signaling pathways. When activation of one or two of these factors is blocked IL-2 expression is completely inhibited. The inability of the other, unaffected factors to work is explained by the striking finding that none of the factors interacts stably with its target site in the IL-2 enhancer unless all the factors are present. Coordinate occupancy of all the sites in the minimal enhancer is apparently maintained by continuous assembly and disassembly cycles that respond to the instantaneous levels of each factor in the nuclear compartment. In addition, the minimal enhancer undergoes specific increases in DNase I accessibility, consistent with dramatic changes in chromatin structure upon activation. Still to be resolved is what interaction(s) conveys T-lineage specificity. In the absence of activating signals, the minimal IL-2 enhancer region in mature T cells is apparently unoccupied, exactly as in non-T lineage cells. However, in a conserved but poorly studied upstream region, we have now mapped several novel sites of DNase I hypersensitivity in vivo that constitutively distinguish IL-2 producer type T cells from cell types that cannot express IL-2. Thus a distinct domain of the IL-2 regulatory sequence may contain sites for competence- or lineage-marking protein contacts.
National Acad Sciences